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  • An Old Charmer: Meeting  Eamon de Valera, Uachtarán na hÉireann, in theÁras. By Fergal MacCabe. No. 22 in the 2025 Offaly History anniversaries series. Blog No 759, 7th Nov 2025

    As this year is the fiftieth anniversary of the death of Eamon de Valera it is probably a good time to recount meeting this towering (literally) but often controversial figure.

    It would now appear to have been discontinued, but in those days the newspapers regularly printed a sort of Court Circular announcing the official engagements of Uachtarán na hÉireann. Dev’s visitors seemed to be drawn almost exclusively from visiting American priests and nuns, so in 1970 I wrote him a rather provocative letter accusing him of being out of touch with ordinary Irish people – especially go ahead modern youngsters such as myself and my wife Brid. How could he possibly know what was happening in the real world!

    (more…)
    November 7, 2025

  • Church Street, Tullamore 125 years ago: the ‘families’ (including boarders, lodgers, and assistants in 1901) – at a time of solid fuel cooking, no sewerage, poor lighting and piped water a recent novelty. No. 12 in the 2025 Living in towns series, prepared with the support of the Heritage Council. By Michael Byrne and James O’Brien. Blog No 758, 31st Oct 2025

    Did you have old friends or family in Church Street 125 years ago? Probably not. It was a busier trading street 125 ago than it is today. That could be said even sixty years. As to its trade it probably suffered from the introduction of one-way systems and restricted parking in the 1960s. Yet another factor may well have been the closing of the markets in Market Square, and also the decline of the Methodist community in the street. Back in 1901 and further back to the first printed valuation of the mid-1850s it had about 57 rateable units – almost all private houses and shops, but also including Hayes’ Hotel, the Methodist church,  the Costello private second-level school, the county infirmary (from 1942 the County Library), Charleville School (until 2006) and the Foresters Hall and Shambles (the meat and veg market).

    Church Street is an interesting street to study with a good mix of mostly middle-class housing, good shops and trades, institutions, and good terraces with lots of boarders and lodgers to add novelty.

    (more…)
    October 31, 2025

  • King’s County/Offaly Infirmary, Church Street, Tullamore, 1767–1921. By Michael Byrne and Offaly History. No. 11 in the 2025 Living in towns series, prepared with the support of the Heritage Council. Blog No 757, 24th October 2025

    You might wonder what was Library Hall used for before being transformed into 15 apartments in about 1995 with a new block of ten to the rear (PD 2824). Yes, some will recall when it was the county library and the happy hours borrowing books and perhaps sitting in the large windows or close to its pot-bellied stove in winter. That was almost fifty years ago. From 1923 to 1927 the building served as the first garda station in Tullamore. And before that: yes, it was the county infirmary or county hospital from 1788 to 1921. How many beds? It had 50 and thirty were generally in use. Budget was £2000 per annum by 1920. That might get you ‘a procedure’ now or a very ‘short stay’.

    (more…)
    October 24, 2025

  • A hidden jewel: The Chapel of the County Hospital in Tullamore. By Fergal MacCabe. A contribution to our Anniversaries series No 20. Blog No 756, 18th October 2025

    The recent decision of the Health Services Executive to allocate funding for the renewal of the windows, doors and walls of the chapel of the original Offaly County Hospital, Tullamore is a welcome and well-timed architectural conservation initiative.

    Opened in 1964, the building, which is a Protected Structure of Regional Importance, is an interesting example of stylistic change in Irish church architecture in the mid-20th century.

    Though its exterior has been compromised by surrounding buildings, the serene and elegant interior is still totally intact.

    (more…)
    October 18, 2025

  • Tullamore’s Irish National Foresters building in Church Street. By Michael Byrne and Offaly History. In the Offaly History series on Church Street, Tullamore: houses, businesses and families over 300 years. No. 10 in the 2025 Living in towns series prepared with the support of the Heritage Council. Blog No 755, 15th October 2025

    The Foresters building fronting Church Street would not be so easy to recognise today as the ground floor is part of the Chanapa Thai restaurant east of the old Shambles.

    In March 2024 we published two articles in this series by Aidan Doyle marking the 125th anniversary of the founding of the Tullamore branch of the Irish National Foresters (I.N.F) and the 100th anniversary of the opening of its new cinema in Market Square. As was noted in a Midland Tribune article forty years ago[1] the Irish National Foresters Benefit Society is an organisation about which most people know very little about although the Tullamore (Conn of the Hundred Battles) branch has been part and parcel of the town since 1899. The I.N.F. may be the fourth oldest organisation in Tullamore after the Freemasons (1759), GAA Tullamore (1888) and the Tullamore Golf Club of 1895-6.

    The home of the club in the early years was the CYMS , later called St Mary’s Hall in Thomas/Benburb Street. By 1903 Tullamore I.N.F had its own building on part of the harbour site at the junction of Harbour Street and Henry/O’Carroll Street. The new building worked well for four years but things went badly against them with a fire in the clubhouse in Harbour Street in July 1907: ‘The Tullamore blaze destroyed what was probably one of the finest Forester Halls in the provinces. And what makes the occurrence all the more lamentable is the fact that it had been built only four years.’

    (more…)
    October 15, 2025

  • The Bulfin Bulletin: The Path to Publication. By Timothy Moloney. 10 10 2025. No. 22 in the 2025 Offaly History anniversaries series. Blog No 754, 10th 2025 

    In February 2025 William Bulfin’s travelogue Rambles in Eirinn was reissued in a new edition by Merrion Press. I had been working on the Bulfin legacy over the previous twelve years, and this publication had emerged out of those efforts.                                                  

    I started researching a biography of William Bulfin in the autumn of 2013. Arriving at the National Library Reading Room in Dublin in September that year, I observed that it looked the same as it did decades ago. There was one major change: books and document references were now accessed initially via computer, though requests for books could still be made on paper slips and the enormous ledgers with entries pasted in by hand were still there on the left as one entered.                                               

    The next day I acquired an ID and requested Rambles in Eirinn and Tales of the Pampas, Bulfin’s two classic works, which I browsed through with enjoyment.

    (more…)
    October 10, 2025

  • Andrew Conway (1797–1860) and Eleanor Conway (1799–1844) of Ferbane and New South Wales. By Laura Price. Blog No 753, 4th October 2025

    A chance find led me to the story of Andrew and Eleanor (Ellen) Conway born in Offaly in the late 1790s. Looking for local records in the National Archives of Ireland I found a letter written to Mrs Eleanor Conway of Ferbane, King’s County. It was from her husband, Andrew Conway, a transported convict in New South Wales, Australia. Andrew wrote to Eleanor telling her of his life in Australia and how she and their child might petition to join him there.[1] He gives a very interesting account of his life in the colony, the prices of goods there, and his hopes for the future. He ends with a request to be remembered to family and friends.

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    October 4, 2025

  • Portavrolla not Portavolla Banagher. By Kieran Keenaghan. Blog No 752, 1st Oct 2025

    The place name ‘Portavrolla’ in Banagher can be traced back at least 450 years. Just very recently one ‘r’ was dropped so we now have Portavolla. ‘Port an bhrollaigh’ means ‘the port or harbour at the breast’ (of the hill). Moiler McCoghlan, pardoned by Queen Elizabeth in 1571 was of Porteabroghla and Portwroly  appears on a 400 year old map.

    ‘Logainm’ makes it clear that the correct name is ‘Portavrolla’.

    Unfortunately when the Portav(r)olla housing estate development took place about 30 years ago an ‘r’ was dropped..

    The sign above  by Offaly County Council ‘Beats Banagher’! – ‘Port an bhrollaigh’ being correct and ‘Portavolla’ being incorrect. Regrettably the beautiful sign itself has recently  disappeared.

    (more…)
    October 1, 2025

  • The leasing of plots or sites for building in Church Street, Tullamore from Lord Charleville to his tenants, 1786–1830s. Part 2. By Michael Byrne and Offaly History. In the Offaly History series on Church Street, Tullamore: houses, businesses and families, over 300 years. No 9 in the 2025 Living in towns series prepared with the support of the Heritage Council. Blog No 751, 27th Sept 2025

    Table 1: Buildings erected in Church Street, Tullamore from 1726 to 1924

    Here we present a summary of the discussion in the last blog on the leasing of Church Street. GV 1 was up to 2000 the old Hayes’ Hotel erected in 1785-6 and having a long garden as far as the Methodist church. Beyond the church is the terrace of 13 houses, the former infirmary and five smaller houses to the river.

    On the north east side were two smaller leaseholds and the Charleville School.

    To follow things see the 1838 map, that of 1890, the leaseholders map and the Griffith Valuation map. Enjoy!

    The OS six-inch 1838 map of Church St

    The Griffith valuation map for most of Church Street of 1854. It can be viewed on Ask About Ireland site.

    A handy summary of the Valuation of 1854 with notes by MB

    Griffith val. 1854  No.StreetDate of constructionLesseeImmediate lessor in GV 1854Lease details
    GV 1Church Street GV 1 to 5a1785, or may be a reconstruction in that year–Reps John Tydd in respect of GV 1 to 5a, for everJohn TowersLease for ever of frontage from Bridge Street to Methodist church of the hotel site on Church Street SW
    GV 2Church StHouse on hotel plotSublease to Henry Mulholland as in GVGeorge Ridley Ridley succeeded Tydd, Towers and Doherty
    GV 3dodoSublease to Michael Delaney as in GVdo part of hotel lands
    GV 4  Sublease to John Lynam as in GVJohn Tidd part of hotel lands
    GV 5  Sublease to Mary Lynam as in GVJohn Tidd part of hotel lands
    GV 6Pt of garden of Cuddihy belowMay predate Cuddihy lease of 1805Henry Manly of  Charleville Sq  The haggard garden carved from the Cuddehy plots south of Methodist church
    GV 7Church Street GV 6 and 71788Methodist church site in place of destroyed preaching house in Bride’s (Swaddling) Lane. GV 6 is garden behind preaching house and haggard in Tarletons no 6 Charleville Sq No lease sighted for church, 33 ft in front. The haggard was part of Charleville Square House up to late 1930s
    GV 8Church Street GV1805 plusLease to Michael Cuddehy, Lord Charleville’s mapping surveyor, 1805 of three plots 96 ft in front by 248 sq ft containing 0.1.15 , plot 1Lyddon. House with two front doors. Let from Revd R.T. TraceyCopy lease with map in OA. Yard at no. 6 part of Cuddehy leasehold and sublet to Manly of GV 6 O’Connor Square
    GV 9Church St GVdoCuddehy plot 1Revd William Molloy House with two front doors. Let from Revd R.T. Tracey 
    GV 10Church StdoCuddehy plot 2 Sublease to Thomas Stanley (Book Stanley, antiquarian) features in RSAI jn
    GV11Church StdoCuddehy plot 3Miss Catherine Cuddy immediate lessorChristopher Woods, distiller
    GV 12Church StdoPlot 4  in the terrace to Charles Warren, 32 ft in front.Richard Warren immediate lessorGV let to Miss Turpin
    GV 13Church StreetdoPlot to  Darby Hyland, 32 ft in frontAbigal McDonnellLet to Revd R. F. Tracey GV 1854
    GV  14Church Street Plot to  Daniel Warren, 32 ft in frontMrs DalyLet to Mrs Anne McDonnell GV 1854
    GV15Church Street   3 Plots, 1  to George Slator 96 ftReps Revd Nath. SlaterGV 1854 Thomas Briscoe
    GV 16Church Street 3 Plots, 2  to George Slator 96 ftdoFrancis Dorman
    GV 17Church Street 3 Plots,3  to George Slator 96 ftdoJames H. Marshall
    GV 18Church Street 3 Plots,3  to George Slator 96 ftdoWilliam W. Philips
    GV 19Church Street 2 plot 1 plots to Robert Belton,Wm K. FawcettGV Vacant, related to Michael Molloy d. 1846, the distiller and Anthony M. died 1851.
    GV 20Church St 2 plots 2 to Robert Belton, temporary barrackdoGV Vacant
    GV 21Church Street17883 plots 2 to Robert Belton, temporary barrackdoThe third house on two plots GV James Reilly
    GV 22Church Street1788No lease King’s County infirmary 86 ft in frontHeld from head landlord the earl of Charleville 
    GV 23Church Street Mrs Jordan original lesseeHeld from Thomas DugganOccupier GV John Pilkington
    GV 24  Church Street Samuel WoodsHeld from earl of CharlevilleOccupier GV Christopher Woods
    GV 25Church Street Held from Elizabeth WoodsdoOccupier GV Christopher Woods
    GV 26Church Street dodoOccupier GV George Whitten
    GV 27Church Street Pound and House see pic with this blogHeld from earl of CharlevilleOccupier GV Christopher Woods
    GV 28Church Street   1869 vacant and later Feehan fowl store, now part of a new 2025 terrace in yard doOccupier GV Thomas Clooney
    GV 29Church Street Mary Lynam Occupier GV Charles Crowley
    GV 30Church Street Mary Lynam Occupier GV Maurice Summers
    GV 31Church Street GV School house and yard, opened 1811Held from earl of Charleville. The female school was in Henry/O’Carroll StreetCharleville Schol boys, on the former Fair Green plots fronting Henry St
    GV 32-49 and Market  Lane 1-12  Late Robert Belton George Slater for ever  398 ft in front in 1854 Thomas F. Slater17 houses, and one office building let to Sterling. This holding included the 12 cabins in Market Lane or Church Lane (Pike’s Lane) valued each in the range of 10s to 15s.From Sterling to Henry Street incl Market Lane. Nos 48 and 49 let to Thomas Sterling by T F Slater and part sublet to James Byrne
    GV 50Church St Mr Sterling A plot occupied by Thomas Sterling from earl of Charleville and probably formed part of the curtilage of the 1726 church
    Laneway not rated  Garden [now Market Lane access to The CornmarketEarl of CharlevilleIn GV called Corn Market Lane
    GV 1Church St but from Market Square Meat Market (Shambles)Do. Tolls of shambles and corn  market let to Robert Willis by 1854. In 1843 with Sterling.Site with part of the Michael Byrne plot of the 1726-1815 church
    GV 51Church St Michael Byrne plot 1Immediate lessor John PerryGV occupier Thomas Magill, much later Morris drapery
    GV 52Church St Michael Byrne plot 2 GV occupier John and A Warren
    GV 53-57 Church Street and 1 Columcille StreetChurch St 44’ 6 inch to William Street and 192 ft to Church St (180 ft by lease) Immediate lessor John Slater from earl of CharlevilleFive houses held by John SlatorGV 1854 occupiers – Atkins, Duggan, Little, Irwin and Nugent, valued in range of £4. 10s. to £8. 10s.
    Church St on the five-foot scale, surveyed 1885-90.
    The Griffith map of 1854 – available on Ask about Ireland.com

    Thanks to the Heritage Council for support to Offaly History in preparing this article.

    September 27, 2025

  • The leasing of plots or sites for building in Church Street, Tullamore from Lord Charleville to his tenants, 1786–c. 1835.By Michael Byrne and Offaly History. Offaly History series, Church Street, Tullamore: houses, businesses and families, over 300 years. No. 8 in the 2025 Living in towns series prepared with the support of the Heritage Council. Blog No 750, 24th Sept 2025

    Church Street is unusual in Tullamore in that it does not have a common width throughout and its lower half, closest to the town centre, is clearly earlier than the upper half from the Methodist church to the Pound Bridge over Tullamore River. While the building pattern is now post 1786 in date it did have at least two earlier buildings in the Protestant church built by Mrs Ellen Moore in 1726. She was the mother of the first Lord Tullamore who died in 1725. Charles the second Lord Tullamore succeeded while still a minor, having been born in 1712.[1] In an earlier article we reproduced maps from the 1770s depicting the church and noted that the building was shown on the on the 1730 Mountrath (Coote) estate map. The church stood in what was post 1820 the yard shown as The Shambles and was not aligned to the later street.[2]

    (more…)
    September 24, 2025

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